Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty book cover Featured Selection

7 Books Like Big Little Lies

Author Liane Moriarty Year 2014 Genre Thriller Publisher Penguin

Liane Moriarty opened Big Little Lies with police interview transcripts about a death at a school trivia night, then spent the entire novel making you guess who died and who killed them. That structural hook is the engine, but the fuel is her razor-sharp portrait of three women navigating motherhood, domestic violence, and the social warfare of a wealthy Australian suburb. Madeline is loud and loyal. Celeste is beautiful and hiding bruises. Jane is new in town and carrying a secret about her son's father. Moriarty writes suburban life the way a war correspondent writes a conflict zone: with dark humor and precise observation. If you finished Big Little Lies wanting more books like Big Little Lies, you are chasing that specific cocktail of domestic suspense, female friendship, and a community with its polished surface cracked wide open.

Liane Moriarty opened Big Little Lies with police interview transcripts about a death at a school trivia night, then spent the entire novel making you guess who died and who killed them. That structural hook is the engine, but the fuel is her razor-sharp portrait of three women navigating motherhood, domestic violence, and the social warfare of a wealthy Australian suburb. Madeline is loud and loyal. Celeste is beautiful and hiding bruises. Jane is new in town and carrying a secret about her son's father. Moriarty writes suburban life the way a war correspondent writes a conflict zone: with dark humor and precise observation. If you finished Big Little Lies wanting more books like Big Little Lies, you are chasing that specific cocktail of domestic suspense, female friendship, and a community with its polished surface cracked wide open.

Books similar to Big Little Lies need to do several things at once. They need a mystery or crime that ties the community together. They need multiple female perspectives that feel distinct and real. They need to treat suburban or domestic settings as places where genuine danger lives behind manicured lawns. And they need that tonal balance Moriarty nails between sharp comedy and genuine darkness. The seven picks below include Moriarty's own follow-ups alongside novels by other writers who understand that the most dangerous place in fiction is often a nice neighborhood.

Books Similar To Big Little Lies

The Husband's Secret by Liane Moriarty book cover

The Husband's Secret

Why it's similar

Liane Moriarty wrote The Husband's Secret before Big Little Lies, and it is the closest match in her own catalog. Cecilia Fitzpatrick finds a letter her husband wrote to be opened after his death. She opens it while he is still alive. What she reads changes everything. The novel follows three women whose lives intersect around this secret, and Moriarty weaves their stories with the same multi-perspective structure she uses in Big Little Lies. The tone is identical. Moriarty moves between domestic comedy and genuine horror without missing a beat.

One chapter has you laughing about Tupperware parties. The next has you gripping the book because a marriage is falling apart in real time. The setting shifts from a school community to a church parish, but the social dynamics are the same: women performing normality while their private lives combust. The moral dilemma at the heart of The Husband's Secret is more focused than Big Little Lies. It asks one specific question: what do you do when your comfortable life depends on a terrible truth staying buried? Readers who loved how Moriarty made Monterey's school community feel like a pressure cooker will find the same effect here, applied to a smaller group with higher personal stakes.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Multi-perspective suburban drama
  • Dark secret threatening community
  • Moriarty's comedy-to-horror tonal shifts
  • Women performing normality
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng book cover

Little Fires Everywhere

Why it's similar

Celeste Ng's Little Fires Everywhere is the American cousin of Big Little Lies. Both novels open with a dramatic event and work backward. Both are set in communities where wealth and conformity create a pressure that eventually explodes. Both use multiple perspectives to show how every person in town sees the same events differently. Ng sets her novel in Shaker Heights, Ohio, a planned community where everything from house colors to grass height is regulated.

When Mia Warren, a mysterious artist, moves in with her teenage daughter, her presence destabilizes the Richardson family and the entire neighborhood. The racial and class tensions that Ng weaves through the story give Little Fires Everywhere a dimension that Big Little Lies does not address as directly. Ng's prose is more literary than Moriarty's, with fewer jokes and more psychological detail. The mothers in both books are fighting for their children and their identities, but Ng's characters have less humor about their predicaments. This is my pick for readers who loved Big Little Lies and want the same community-unraveling structure with sharper social commentary about who gets to belong and who does not.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Planned community disrupted
  • Multiple mother perspectives
  • Class and social tension
  • Opening with climactic event
Miracle Creek by Angie Kim book cover

Miracle Creek

Why it's similar

Angie Kim's Miracle Creek takes the Big Little Lies formula and applies it to a courtroom. After a fire at a hyperbaric oxygen therapy facility kills two people, including a child, a mother is put on trial for murder. Kim structures the novel as a legal thriller that peels back the secrets of everyone connected to the facility: the Korean-American family that runs it, the parents who brought their children there, the teenagers who might have been nearby that night. Like Big Little Lies, every character is hiding something, and the truth emerges through contradictions between their public statements and private realities. Kim writes with more gravity than Moriarty.

There are fewer comedic moments, and the cultural specificity of her Korean-American characters adds depth that feels earned rather than decorative. The trial structure gives the revelations more formal weight than Moriarty's police interview fragments. Each chapter shifts perspective the way Big Little Lies does, letting readers see how the same event looks different depending on who is watching. This is the pick for readers who want Big Little Lies with more courtroom tension and a protagonist community defined by desperation rather than privilege.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Community secrets revealed through investigation
  • Multiple unreliable perspectives
  • Parents hiding truths
  • Tragedy as catalyst for revelations
The Gifted School by Bruce Holsinger book cover

The Gifted School

Why it's similar

Bruce Holsinger wrote The Gifted School as if someone described Big Little Lies to him and said make it about school admissions. Four families in a wealthy Colorado town learn that a new school for gifted children is opening. The competitive mania that follows destroys friendships, exposes marriages, and turns parents into people they do not recognize. Holsinger writes the social dynamics of upper-middle-class parenting with the same lethal precision Moriarty brings to her Australian suburbs. The dinner parties where alliances shift. The group texts where passive aggression lives. The way children become extensions of their parents' egos.

The tonal register is close to Moriarty's: sharp enough to be funny, dark enough to be disturbing. The novel rotates between four mothers' perspectives, each convinced she is handling the situation correctly while making increasingly terrible choices. If you loved Big Little Lies specifically for its skewering of competitive parenting culture, The Gifted School takes that single thread and builds an entire novel around it. The stakes are lower. Nobody dies. But the social carnage is just as thorough.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Competitive parenting culture
  • Multiple mother perspectives
  • Wealthy community imploding
  • Sharp social satire
The Others Gold by Elizabeth Ames book cover

The Others Gold

Why it's similar

Elizabeth Ames wrote The Others Gold as a quieter, more literary take on the female friendship dynamics that power Big Little Lies. Four women meet as college roommates and stay close for decades. The novel is divided into four sections, each focused on a different woman and the secret act she committed that tested the group's bond. Ames is less interested in plot mechanics than Moriarty. There is no murder mystery, no police investigation.

The suspense comes from watching friendships absorb betrayals and wondering which one will prove fatal to the group. The writing is more restrained than Moriarty's, with less humor and more attention to the internal experience of loyalty and resentment. Where Big Little Lies shows friendships forged in crisis, The Others Gold shows friendships tested by ordinary life over twenty years. The rotating structure gives each woman equal weight, the way Moriarty distributes screen time among Madeline, Celeste, and Jane. Readers who loved Big Little Lies primarily for the friendship dynamics rather than the mystery will find The Others Gold working that same territory with more emotional precision and less genre machinery.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Female friendship across decades
  • Rotating perspectives
  • Secrets within close bonds
  • Each woman gets her own section
Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty book cover

Apples Never Fall

Why it's similar

Liane Moriarty returned to the Big Little Lies formula with Apples Never Fall and added a missing-person mystery to the mix. Joy Delaney, the matriarch of a family of tennis coaches, disappears. Her four adult children start wondering if their father Stan is responsible. Moriarty builds the novel around the same technique that makes Big Little Lies work: present the audience with a dramatic premise, then fill in the family history that makes each possible explanation plausible. The tennis world replaces the school community, but the social dynamics are similar. Status, competition, and the performance of family happiness under public scrutiny.

Moriarty writes the four siblings with distinct voices, each carrying a different version of the family mythology. The humor is vintage Moriarty. She can make you laugh in the middle of a scene about a potentially murdered mother. The pacing is slower than Big Little Lies, and the novel runs longer, giving the family backstory more room. Readers who want more Moriarty will get exactly what they expect: domestic suspense with sharp wit, complicated family dynamics, and a resolution that reframes everything that came before it.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Family mystery with dark humor
  • Moriarty's signature wit
  • Multiple sibling perspectives
  • Performance of family normality
The Need by Helen Phillips book cover

The Need

Why it's similar

Helen Phillips wrote The Need as a psychological thriller about motherhood, and it operates on a frequency that Big Little Lies readers will recognize even though the genres barely overlap. Molly is a paleobotanist and mother of two young children. An intruder appears in her home. What follows bends reality in ways I will not describe because the surprises are the point. The connection to Big Little Lies is in Phillips's treatment of maternal anxiety as a source of genuine terror. Moriarty understands that being a mother in an unsafe situation creates a specific kind of fear: not for yourself but for someone you would kill for. Phillips takes that understanding and pushes it into surreal territory.

The prose is tighter and stranger than Moriarty's, with short chapters that feel like held breaths. This is the hidden gem on the list. It is not a suburban community novel. It does not have multiple perspectives or dark comedy. But it captures the exact feeling that runs beneath Big Little Lies: the terrifying knowledge that you cannot control what threatens your children. If Celeste's storyline hit you hardest, The Need works the same nerve with different tools.

Elements in common with Big Little Lies

  • Maternal fear as thriller engine
  • Domestic space as danger zone
  • Short sharp chapters
  • Threat to children driving plot
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Liane Moriarty

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